Welcome, Guest! - or
Easy to remember!  »  VinNews.com

Houston, TX - Mexican Jews Might Have Lost Billions In Texas Tycoon's Alleged Scheme

Published on:   February 24, 2009 01:07 PM
Change text size Text Size  
Bookmark and Share
Stanford exits his helicopter in 2008Stanford exits his helicopter in 2008

Houston, TX - Texas-born bank tycoon Robert Allen Stanford, who faces unfolding fraud allegations surrounding his Antiguan investment banks, may end up filling a Bernard Madoff-like role for Latin American Jews and specifically the Mexico City community.

While a smaller sum of money is involved - “only” $8 billion of investments are being questioned - a lot more is at stake.

Thousands of Mexico City’s Jews purportedly invested with Stanford’s banks, lured in by promises of 14-percent returns and a seemingly secure place for their money outside the volatile Mexican economy.

Pesos were tucked away in Caribbean accounts, and investors felt assured that their money would be available whenever the need arose.

But now that the need has arisen - the current financial crisis is by many accounts growing worse, and people are strapped for cash - Mexico City’s Jews, a community of nearly 40,000, cannot get to their money.

Advertisement:

Earlier this month, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the FBI began investigating Stanford’s company, Stanford Financial Group, after allegations of fraud began to surface.

Federal agents raided the offices of Stanford Financial on February 17, and the SEC charged Stanford with “massive ongoing fraud” based on the $8b. investment scheme.

Stanford’s two banks were seized by Antiguan government officials last week, and a thorough investigation with the cooperation of American regulators is now under way.

All of the banks’ assets have been frozen and Stanford’s Mexico City branch shut its doors, leaving many there to wonder if they would ever see their money again.

“All of my mom’s retirement savings were in one of Stanford’s banks,” said “Rosa,” an immigrant from Mexico City now living in Israel.

She asked that her real name be withheld due to the sensitivity of the situation, and said that many of Mexico City’s Jews would prefer to remain silent about their losses, rather than allow the Mexican government to find out about their offshore, off-the-book investments.

“Everything in Mexico is fuzzy, it’s a scary place,” she said. “There’s no rule of law, no real government, and the police themselves are thieves. Because it’s so dangerous, you have to take care of yourself, and the only way to take care of yourself is with money. That’s why so many people keep money somewhere else, outside of the country.”

But while Mexico City’s Jews have attained security only by gaining wealth and remaining steadfastly insular, Rosa also explained that the very foundations of the community were now threatened with collapse.

“If people don’t get their money back, the Jewish community is going to change completely,” Rosa continued. “The society in Mexico is extremely divided, there’s no middle class, it’s either rich or poor. The Jews are wealthy and they keep to themselves, they go to Jewish schools, and they have very little contact with other Mexicans.

“If they lose their money, they won’t be able to remain in Mexico without that lifestyle, and I think we’ll see a huge wave of aliya.”

Rosa said she believed at least 10,000 families had invested with Stanford’s bank, but that the number could be much higher.

“It could be a lot more,” she said. “But it’s hard to tell, because people will keep it a secret.”

An operator at the Jewish Agency office in Mexico City told The Jerusalem Post she was not at liberty to discuss details of the situation.

“We know about Stanford and what happened in Antigua,” she said. “But we can’t talk about who may have been hurt by this. It’s a private issue.”

Others’ however, said that they feared the ongoing financial situation, accompanied with new fallout from the Stanford scandal, which follows so close on the heels of the $50b. Madoff disaster, could change Diaspora Jewish communities forever.

“These are the sort of situations where people are not only losing their investments, but the terms of Jewish life can change,” said Bobby Brown, a former Diaspora affairs adviser to both Prime Ministers Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak, who has dealt extensively with Latin American Jewish communities.

“When one person or entity becomes so central, and then they go down, it takes the whole community down with them.”

Now, Brown explained, it was important to keep an eye on the fallout from Stanford’s fraudulent investments, to see how it plays out in the Mexican Jewish community’s public sphere.

“The key question is how much will this affect the schools and the synagogues,” he said. “I’m sure Mexico has already been hammered by the financial crisis, so we’ll have to wait and see how this adds to the situation.

“The pattern has been, slowly, all of these small communities are closing down,” Brown continued. “This is the problem with not having the kind of financial strength to survive without key individuals.”


More of today's headlines

Buenos Aires, Argentina - The Catholic priest who is at the centre of a global storm of controversy over his denial of the Holocaust left Argentina today for... New York - A little more than a year before he blithely confessed to masterminding the largest Ponzi scheme in history, Bernie Madoff attended the wedding of his niece...

 

Total13

Read Comments (13)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Feb 24, 2009 at 11:47 AM Eli Says:

Why is there so little known about the Mexican Jewish community, I knew there was a small Jewish community in Mexico, but I never knew how wealthy they were.

2

 Feb 24, 2009 at 01:29 PM I am mispalel for Mexican Kehilla Says:

If this is true it would be absolutely disasterous. The Mexican Kehilla is very traditional and I learned with many in Eretz Yisrael years ago. They are very strong of heart. Many have begun to move to the US and Israel. Please Yidden, never invest with a one man personality company. At least invest in a Merrill Lynch or other company too big for the US government to allow it to fail and have some achraius if they are at fault. One man firms are run by gaivadikeh ganevim apparently and no government will ever back them.

3

 Feb 24, 2009 at 01:44 PM yossi Says:

Reply to #2  
I am mispalel for Mexican Kehilla Says:

If this is true it would be absolutely disasterous. The Mexican Kehilla is very traditional and I learned with many in Eretz Yisrael years ago. They are very strong of heart. Many have begun to move to the US and Israel. Please Yidden, never invest with a one man personality company. At least invest in a Merrill Lynch or other company too big for the US government to allow it to fail and have some achraius if they are at fault. One man firms are run by gaivadikeh ganevim apparently and no government will ever back them.

You miss the point - they got into trouble because they were hiding their money in "off shore off the books" accounts and therefore cannot go to the government for help. If they had been honest they would have had protection. That is the correct lesson. Dina d'malchusa dina'

4

 Feb 24, 2009 at 02:32 PM Joe Says:

Reply to #3  
yossi Says:

You miss the point - they got into trouble because they were hiding their money in "off shore off the books" accounts and therefore cannot go to the government for help. If they had been honest they would have had protection. That is the correct lesson. Dina d'malchusa dina'

You are a serious moron, did you not read that all the officials there are crooks? If you trust them so much why don't you go down there and deposit your life time savings into some shabby Mexican bank. Stop being so righteous with others money...

5

 Feb 24, 2009 at 02:24 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #3  
yossi Says:

You miss the point - they got into trouble because they were hiding their money in "off shore off the books" accounts and therefore cannot go to the government for help. If they had been honest they would have had protection. That is the correct lesson. Dina d'malchusa dina'

to poster number 3 from the local to the executive level corruption in Mexico is astronomical and bribery and off the books deal making is not just rampant but a way of life. It is known fact that the way you get out of any minor infraction is by waving a few dollars. DIna di malchusa dina does not necessarily apply in such places. What is the correct lesson? While we cannot judge an entire community who happen to have very fine ehrlich people (and I must admit it is not easy to pick up and leave)We are living in a time where a jew can live in eretz yisrael rather easily why would someone want to stay in a place so unsafe and unstable like Mexico, former USSR etc... where this trickery is necessary on such a grand scale

6

 Feb 24, 2009 at 02:21 PM Moish Says:

to #2 you mean like don't invest in Lehman bros.....right?

7

 Feb 24, 2009 at 03:00 PM Yossi Says:

Reply to #4  
Joe Says:

You are a serious moron, did you not read that all the officials there are crooks? If you trust them so much why don't you go down there and deposit your life time savings into some shabby Mexican bank. Stop being so righteous with others money...

They could invest with American banks that have offices in Mexico or in the US. However, all of that would be on the books.

8

 Feb 24, 2009 at 03:59 PM Milhouse Says:

Reply to #3  
yossi Says:

You miss the point - they got into trouble because they were hiding their money in "off shore off the books" accounts and therefore cannot go to the government for help. If they had been honest they would have had protection. That is the correct lesson. Dina d'malchusa dina'

Yeah, right. Tell it to your grandfather and all your Jewish ancestors - if you have any. I guarantee they all dealt shvartz whenever they could, and thought nothing of it. You can take your new religion of dina demalchusa and shove it. You may deal with your own money how you like, but you have no right to condemn yidden to the poverty that is inevitable for any mexican who deals only on the books.

9

 Feb 24, 2009 at 04:06 PM Yitzchok Says:

I hope the yidden were smarter then to invest with this guy and maybe just had their money on deposit will hopefully get every penny back., There are "eherlicher yiddishe" bankers that are honest, think of names like Safra, Safdie' etc... there are many others. The smartest thing to do is. spread the money out over a few banks like, Chase, Bank of America, even Citibank. and if someone tels you they have an investment that pays 14% run as fast as you can the other way.

10

 Feb 24, 2009 at 06:25 PM Yossi Says:

Reply to #8  
Milhouse Says:

Yeah, right. Tell it to your grandfather and all your Jewish ancestors - if you have any. I guarantee they all dealt shvartz whenever they could, and thought nothing of it. You can take your new religion of dina demalchusa and shove it. You may deal with your own money how you like, but you have no right to condemn yidden to the poverty that is inevitable for any mexican who deals only on the books.

Midivar sheker tirchak

11

 Feb 24, 2009 at 09:24 PM 1084 Says:

Reply to #10  
Yossi Says:

Midivar sheker tirchak

u spelled it wrong and anyways read before u write

12

 Feb 25, 2009 at 03:48 AM Grickmeyer Says:

Reply to #3  
yossi Says:

You miss the point - they got into trouble because they were hiding their money in "off shore off the books" accounts and therefore cannot go to the government for help. If they had been honest they would have had protection. That is the correct lesson. Dina d'malchusa dina'

Wrong! "Dina D'malchusa Dina" doesn't apply in Mexico. There's no "dina" and no "malchusa!"

13

 Feb 24, 2009 at 11:08 PM Anonymous Says:

This article quotes "Rosa" who said "she believed at least 10,000 families had invested with Stanford's bank, but that the number could be much higher." The article says the Mexico City Jewish community has close to 40000 people.
I think that paints a picture of a very wealthy community. It would give the appearance that the vast majority of families invested in this bank.
I think what it really indicates is that "Rosa" guessed really bad. I cannot imagine it is anything but a guess- how could she possibly know? Do you think banks release data on their depositors' religion?
Like most Jewish communities, Mexico City has rich and poor Jews. They are generally better off economically than Mexican society at large, but the majority are not wealthy.
As an example, their is a tuition assistance program run by one of the Kehillos for children in local Jewish schools. It is a major source of funding for at least many of the schools. While I never saw numbers, my impression is that it helps large numbers of students- presumably not "wealthy" ones.

14

Sign-in to post a comment

Scroll Up
Advertisements:

Sell your scrap gold and broken jewelry and earn hard cash sell gold today!